Thank you for sharing this important perspective. While war inevitably brings hardship, it is heartening to reflect on how medical professionals work tirelessly to save lives and alleviate suffering, guided by their compassion and duty to care for others.
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Combat Casualty Care. Lessons Learned from OEF and OIF (2012)
1. Combat Casualty Care
Lessons Learned from OEF and OIF
Edited by
Eric Savitsky, MD
Colonel Brian Eastridge, MD
Pelagique, LLC
Los Angeles, California
University of California at Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Office of The Surgeon General
United States Army, Falls Church, Virginia
AMEDD Center & School
Fort Sam Houston, Texas
Borden Institute
Fort Detrick, Maryland
2. Combat Casualty Care
Lessons Learned from OEF and OIF
Published by the
Office of the Surgeon General
Department of the Army, United States of America
Editor in Chief
Martha K. Lenhart, MD, PhD
Colonel, MC, US Army
Director, Borden Institute
Assistant Professor of Surgery
F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
Medical Content Editor
Eric Savitsky, MD
UCLA Professor of Emergency Medicine/Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Executive Director, UCLA Center for International Medicine
Director, UCLA EMC Trauma Services and Education
Military Editor
Brian Eastridge, MD, FACS
Colonel, MC, US Army
Trauma and Surgical Critical Care
Director, Joint Trauma System Program
Trauma Consultant, US Army Surgeon General
3. Combat Casualty Care
Lessons Learned from OEF and OIF
Editors
Eric Savitsky, MD
Colonel Brian Eastridge, MD
Associate Editors
Dan Katz, MD
Richelle Cooper, MD
Office of The Surgeon General
United States Army
Falls Church, Virginia
AMEDD Center & School
Fort Sam Houston, Texas
Borden Institute
Fort Detrick, Maryland
2012
Weapons Effects | iii
4. Editorial Staff:
borden institute
pelagique, llc
Douglas Wise
Senior Layout Editor
UCLA
Richelle Cooper, MD
Research Methodology Editor
Vivian Mason
Technical Editor
Bruce Maston
Visual Information Specialist
Dan Katz, MD
Associate Medical Editor
pelagique, llc
Nicole Durden, MPP
Digital Media Editor
pelagique, llc
Koren Bertolli, MIA
Copy Editor
This volume was prepared for military medical educational use. The focus of the information is to foster discussion that may form
the basis of doctrine and policy. The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private views of the authors and are not to be
construed as official or as reflecting the views of the Department of the Army or the Department of Defense.
Dosage Selection:
The authors and publisher have made every effort to ensure the accuracy of dosages cited herein.
However, it is the responsibility of every practitioner to consult appropriate information sources to ascertain correct dosages for
each clinical situation, especially for new or unfamiliar drugs and procedures. The authors, editors, publisher, and the Department
of Defense cannot be held responsible for any errors found in this book.
Use of Trade or Brand Names:
Use of trade or brand names in this publication is for illustrative purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the Department
of Defense.
Neutral Language:
Unless this publication states otherwise, masculine nouns and pronouns do not refer exclusively to men.
certain parts of this publication pertain to copyright restrictions.
all rights reserved.
no copyrighted parts of this publication may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical (including
photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system), without permission in writing from the publisher or copyright owner.
Published by the Office of The Surgeon General
Borden Institute
Fort Detrick, MD 21702-5000
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Combat casualty care : lessons learned from OEF and OIF / editor-in-chief, Martha K. Lenhart; medical editor, Eric Savitsky; military editor,
Brian Eastridge.
p. ; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
I. Lenhart, Martha K. II. Savitsky, Eric. III. Eastridge, Brian. IV. United States. Dept. of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General. V. Borden
Institute (U.S.)
[DNLM: 1. Military Medicine--methods. 2. Wounds and Injuries--surgery. 3. Afghan Campaign 2001-. 4. Iraq War, 2003-2011. 5. War.
WO 800]
616.9′8023--dc23
2011032530
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
54321
iv 19,Combat Casualty 12
| 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, Care
6. Chapter 12 Acute Burn Care.................................................................................................................593
Evan M. Renz and Leopoldo C. Cancio
Chapter 13 Critical Care........................................................................................................................639
David Norton, Phillip Mason, and Jay Johannigman
Abbreviations and Acronyms................................................................................................................xv
Index...........................................................................................................................................................xxi
vi | Combat Casualty Care
7. Contributors
Rocco A. Armonda, MD, LTC, MC, US Army
Kenneth S. Azarow, MD, FACS, FAAP, COL (Ret), MC, US Army
Alec C. Beekley, MD, FACS, LTC, MC, US Army
Randy Bell, MD
John Belperio, MD
Lorne H. Blackbourne, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Harold Bohman, MD, CAPT, MC, US Navy
Sidney B. Brevard, MD, MPH, FACS, COL, US Air Force
Frank K. Butler, MD, FACS, CAPT (Ret), US Navy
Leopoldo C. Cancio, MD, FACS, COL, MC, US Army
Howard Champion, MD, FRCS, FACS
Raymond I. Cho, MD, LTC, MC, US Army
William P. Cranston, PA, CPT, SP, US Army
Henry Cryer, MD
Robert A. De Lorenzo, MD, MSM, FACEP, COL, US Army
Brian J. Eastridge, MD, COL, MC, US Army
James R. Ficke, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Gelareh Gabayan, MD
Robert T. Gerhardt, MD, MPH, FACEP, FAAEM, LTC, US Army
Robert G. Hale, DDS, COL, US Army
David K. Hayes, MD, COL, US Army
John Hiatt, MD
Jay Johannigman, MD, COL, US Air Force Reserve
Dan Katz, MD
Jess M. Kirby, MD, MAJ, MC, US Army
John F. Kragh, Jr., MD, COL, MC, US Army
Geoffrey S. F. Ling, MD, PhD, COL, US Army
Robert L. Mabry, MD, FACEP, MAJ(P), US Army
Swaminatha Mahadevan, MD
Scott A. Marshall, MD
Jonathan Martin, MD
Phillip Mason, MD, MAJ, US Air Force
Alan Murdock, MD, LTC, US Air Force
David Norton, MD, LTC, MC, US Air Force
George Orloff, MD
Jeremy G. Perkins, MD, FACP, LTC, MC, US Army
Kyle Peterson, DO, CDR, US Navy
David B. Powers, DMD, MD, COL, US Air Force
Todd Rasmussen, MD, LTC, US Air Force
Evan M. Renz, MD, FACS, LTC(P), MC, US Army
Eric Savitsky, MD
Danielle Schindler, MD
Philip C. Spinella, MD
Areti Tillou, MD, MsED, FACS
Raymond F. Topp, MD, LTC, MC, US Army
Lee Ann Young, BSME, MA
Weapons Effects | vii
Contributors
8. Photo Contributors
We thank the following individuals and organizations for providing some of the images used in this book.
American Academy of Neurology Practice Parameter on
Management of Concussions
Applied Research Associates, Inc.
Harold Bohman, MD, CAPT, MC, US Navy
Borden Institute, Office of The Surgeon General,
Washington, DC
David Burris, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Leopoldo C. Cancio, MD, FACS, COL, MC, US Army
David Carmack, MD
Center for Sustainment of Trauma and Readiness Skills
(C-STARS)
Combat Medical Systems™
Composite Resources, Inc.
Subrato Deb, MD, CDR
Defense Imagery Management Operations Center (DIMOC)
Defense-Update.com
Delfi Medical Innovations, Inc.
Robert H. Demling, MD, Harvard Medical School
DJO, LLC
Brian J. Eastridge, MD, FACS, COL, US Army
Elsevier
James R. Ficke, MD, COL, MC, US Army
J. Christian Fox, MD, University of California–Irvine
Aletta Frazier, MD, Illustrator
GlobalSecurity.org
Mitchell Goff, MD
Tamer Goksel, DDS, MD, COL, US Army
Chris Gralapp, Illustrator
Robert R. Granville, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Kurt W. Grathwohl, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Timothy Hain, MD, Northwestern University
Robert G. Hale, DDS, COL, US Army
John B. Holcomb, MD, COL (Ret), MC, US Army
iCasualties.org
Joint Combat Trauma Management Course, 2007
Joint Theater Trauma Registry
Joint Theater Trauma Systems Program, US Army Institute
of Surgical Research
Dan Katz, MD
Glenn J. Kerr, MD, MAJ, MC, US Army
John F. Kragh, Jr., MD, COL, MC, US Army
Donald C. Kowalewski, LTC, MC, US Air Force
LearningRadiology.com
Gene Liu, MD, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Michael Shaun Machen, MD, COL, MC, US Army
Swaminatha V. Mahadevan, MD, Stanford University
Jonathan Martin, MD, Connecticut Children’s Medical
Center
Massachusetts Medical Society
Bruce Maston, Illustrator
Alan Murdock, MD, LTC, US Air Force
Juan D. Nava, Medical Illustrator, Brooke Army Medical
Center
viii | Combat Casualty Care
Joel Nichols, MD
North American Rescue, LLC
David Norton, MD, LTC, MC, US Air Force
Pelagique, LLC
Pelvic Binder, Inc.
David B. Powers, DMD, MD, COL, US Air Force
Rady Rahban, MD
Todd Rasmussen, MD, LTC, US Air Force
Reichert Technologies
Evan M. Renz, MD, FACS, LTC(P), MC, US Army
Jessica Shull, Illustrator
Philip C. Spinella, MD
Stryker Instruments
Raymond F. Topp, MD, LTC, MC, US Army
Trauma.org
UCLA Center for International Medicine
United Nations Mine Action Service
University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center
Eric D. Weichel, MD
Wikimedia Commons
9. Acknowledgments
We extend our gratitude to Robert (Bob) Foster, Director of Biosystems (Ret), Office of the Director, Defense
Research and Engineering; and Colonel (Ret) John Holcomb for their vision and guidance in support of this
project.
This educational effort was made possible through the Defense Health Program Small Business Innovation
Research (SBIR) Program and Telemedicine and Advanced Technology and Research Center (TATRC).
A special thanks to Colonel Lorne Blackbourne (USAISR), Colonel Karl Friedl (TATRC), and Jessica Kenyon
(TATRC) for their support and guidance throughout this effort.
Weapons Effects
Acknowledgments || ix
ix
11. Preface
To enhance combat casualty care (CCC) pre-deployment education for all healthcare providers, this
contemporary educational program was developed through the Small Business Innovative Research
Program in partnership with civilian industry and the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs.
This military medicine textbook is designed to deliver CCC information that will facilitate transition from
a continental United States (CONUS) or civilian practice to the combat care environment. Establishment
of the Joint Theater Trauma System (JTTS) and the Joint Theater Trauma Registry (JTTR), coupled with
the efforts of the authors, has resulted in the creation of the most comprehensive, evidence-based depiction
of the latest advances in CCC.
Lessons learned in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) have been
fortified with evidence-based recommendations with the intent of improving casualty care. The chapters
specifically discuss differences between CCC and civilian sector care, particularly in the scheme of
“echelonized” care. Overall, the educational curriculum was designed to address the leading causes of
preventable death and disability in OEF and OIF. Specifically, the generalist CCC provider is presented
requisite information for optimal care of US combat casualties in the first 72 to 96 hours after injury.
The specialist CCC provider is afforded similar information, which is supplemented by lessons learned for
definitive care of host nation patients.
These thirteen peer-reviewed and well-referenced chapters were authored by military subject matter experts
with extensive hands-on experience providing CCC during the course of OEF and OIF, and were edited by
an experienced team of physicians and research methodologists. Together they will provide readers with a
solid understanding of the latest advances in OEF and OIF CCC. This information provides an excellent
supplement to pre-deployment CCC training and education. Ideally, readers will aptly apply the newly
acquired knowledge toward improving CCC.
Eric Savitsky, MD
UCLA Professor of Emergency Medicine/Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Executive Director, UCLA Center for International Medicine
Director, UCLA EMC Trauma Services and Education
Los Angeles, CA
June 2011
Weapons Preface | xi
Effects
13. Prologue
“War is Hell.” — William Tecumseh Sherman
The battlefield will challenge your medical skills, knowledge, personal courage, and perseverance. However,
in the end, you and the Wounded Warrior will be better for it.
It is 0200. You are on a forward operating base in the high desert somewhere in southwest Asia. The radio
in the TOC (Tactical Operations Center) crackles to life, breaking the silence of the night:
This is Whiskey … Foxtrot … Tango … Niner. Inbound in six mikes with two urgent surgicals from an IED.
Requesting a hot offload … TIC in progress … more casualties to pick up. … Over.
Outside of the resuscitation area, over the whisper of the cold wind, you hear the whir of the rotor blades of
the approaching MEDEVAC Blackhawks. Setting down on the landing zone with a deafening roar, all you
can see is the static electrical discharge from the spinning rotors. Appearing from the darkness are wheeled
litter carriers bearing casualties and teams of attendants racing alongside. Now, it’s your turn. This is our
calling, the reason we are here … for the Warrior. The content of this book was composed for you by those
who have “been in your boots.”
Similar situations have played out over 47,000 times for US military combat casualties. Survival from
injury on the modern battlefield is unprecedented; the current case fatality rate is 11%. This is even more
astonishing, considering the complexity of injury and evacuation of casualties through multiple levels of
care across the globe. Throughout history, armed conflict has shaped advances in medicine and surgery.
These conflicts are no different. However, with the progress of technology and communication, we are
better able to potentiate and disseminate recent lessons learned.
The paradigm of tactical combat casualty care has dramatically altered pre-hospital management of the
combat casualty. Tourniquets have saved countless lives. The novel concept of damage control resuscitation
was born on these battlefields and has reduced the mortality rate of casualties requiring massive transfusion
from 40% to less than 20%. The Joint Theater Trauma System (JTTS) was implemented to enhance injury
care performance and to improve provider communication and dissemination of lessons learned across
the vast continuum of care. Efforts of the trauma system have lead to the development of more than 30
evidence-based battlefield relevant clinical practice guidelines, and decreased morbidity and mortality from
combat injury.
The legacy of this conflict will not only be what we have learned, but also how rapidly we were able to
disseminate, educate, and change practice on the battlefield in nearly “real-time,” and to translate many
combat lessons learned into trauma care in the civilian environment. This text is a natural complement of
our efforts contributing to evolution of casualty care on the battlefield.
Brian Eastridge, MD, FACS
Colonel, MC, US Army
Trauma Consultant, US Army Surgeon General
San Antonio, TX
June 2011
Weapons Effects | xiii
Prologue
15. modern warfare
Chapter 1
Contributing Authors
Alec C. Beekley, MD, FACS, LTC, MC, US Army
Harold Bohman, MD, CAPT, MC, US Navy
Danielle Schindler, MD
16. All figures and tables included in this chapter have been used with permission from Pelagique, LLC, the
UCLA Center for International Medicine, and/or the authors, unless otherwise noted.
Use of imagery from the Defense Imagery Management Operations Center (DIMOC) does not imply or
constitute Department of Defense (DOD) endorsement of this company, its products, or services.
Disclaimer
The opinions and views expressed herein belong solely to those of the authors. They are not nor should
they be implied as being endorsed by the United States Uniformed Services University of the Health
Sciences, Department of the Army, Department of the Navy, Department of the Air Force, Department of
Defense, or any other branch of the federal government.
17. Table of Contents
Introduction............................................................................................................ 4
Lessons Learned - Know Your Environment........................................................................5
Joint Theater Trauma Registry (JTTR)........................................................................ 9
Combat Injury Patterns......................................................................................................11
Causes of Preventable Death...............................................................................................11
Advances in Combat Casualty Care...........................................................................13
Advancements in Combat Casualty Care Training............................................................13
Equipment Changes............................................................................................................15
Body Armor..........................................................................................................................15
Hemorrhage Control Adjuncts.............................................................................................15
Organizational Innovations................................................................................................17
Echelons of Care..................................................................................................................17
Patient Evacuation and Transport........................................................................................20
Damage Control Strategies..................................................................................................22
Damage Control Resuscitation.............................................................................................22
Permissive Hypotension.......................................................................................................24
Blood Product Transfusion Ratios........................................................................................24
Role of Fresh Whole Blood.................................................................................................26
Role of Recombinant Factor VIIa........................................................................................27
Damage Control Surgery......................................................................................................27
Summary............................................................................................................... 29
Case Study............................................................................................................. 29
References............................................................................................................. 32
Modern Warfare | 3
18. Introduction
War has historically provided an opportunity for
medical advancement and innovation. Military
medical personnel face the challenge of managing a
high volume of severe multisystem injuries, relative
to what is encountered in civilian practice. Combat
casualty care (CCC) providers face injury and illness
in the context of an austere wartime environment,
in which transport times may be unpredictable
and supplies and staff limited. The frequency of
multiple or mass casualties may overwhelm available
resources. In addition, CCC providers not only care
for injured members of the military, but for injuries
and illnesses suffered by the local population and
enemy combatants (Fig. 1).
Such challenges have fostered innovation in all
aspects of CCC. Since 2001, significant changes
including the organization of medical teams,
new resuscitation practices, new technologies,
and changes in evacuation strategies have been
implemented. The creation of a database of all
military casualties from the current conflicts in
Iraq and Afghanistan, known as the Joint Theater Figure 1. Level III Combat Support Hospital. Image courtesy of the
Trauma Registry (JTTR), has allowed for an Borden Institute, Office of The Surgeon General, Washington, DC.
unprecedented level of analysis of wartime injuries
and deaths. Such analysis has been used to identify potentially preventable causes of death and paved the
way for implementation of new technologies and practices targeted towards reduction of morbidity and
mortality from combat.1,2
Combat casualty care providers face multiple challenges in wartime including an austere environment,
limited supplies or staff, multiple-casualty-incidents, and caring for the local population or enemy
combatants.
Comparing Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) to Vietnam, the
mortality rate of combat-sustained injury has decreased by nearly half.1 The survival rate in these conflicts
exceeds 90 percent, which is higher than prior conflicts.3,4 Wounding patterns in OEF/OIF differ from
that of previous conflicts (World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf War), which had a higher
proportion of thoracic injuries and fewer head and neck injuries.5,6,7,8,9 There has been a decreased incidence
of wounds to the abdomen since the Persian Gulf War.10 The percentage of blast-related injuries is now
higher.9
The resources and evacuation systems used to treat casualties have seen substantial improvements since the
prior conflicts. A special emphasis has been placed upon identifying wounding patterns, adverse outcomes,
4 | Modern Warfare
19. and preventable deaths.9,11,12,13,14 Improvements in body armor, military tactics, and the ability to respond
quickly and effectively to trauma in a combat environment has led to dramatic improvements in morbidity
and mortality.1,13
Lessons Learned - Know Your Environment
The following is an experience of a general surgeon during an early deployment:
I was assigned to a Forward Surgical Team (FST) that took us two hours driving south of Baghdad to reach
by ground vehicle. It was my first time there; I was nervous about convoys, because we were driving through
a heavily attacked route; and my intern classmate (a general surgeon) had been killed on an FST three weeks
before I left for Iraq. Needless to say, my mind really wasn’t on how far we were from the nearest Combat
Support Hospital (CSH), what the evacuation times were, or even how far we were actually driving (we were
going very slowly, stopping and starting a lot). So when we arrived at our FST site, it felt like we had come
a long way to get there. On my prior FST experience in Afghanistan, our FST was two and one-half hours
by fixed-wing aircraft to the nearest CSH.
It turns out that we were only about 15 minutes by helicopter from the CSH. I assumed that we were much
farther away. The proximity to more robust hospital support clearly makes a difference regarding how you
triage multiple patients and what kind of operations you undertake. Nobody had oriented me to this, and
at the time I didn’t think to ask. I was at the FST 17 days before our first casualties arrived. There were
four wounded casualties from an improvised explosive device (IED) attack. So here I am, three years out of
residency, used to taking calls two to four times a month at a relatively slow Level II trauma center. I had
performed maybe four or five blunt trauma-related operations in that period, and only a few penetrating
trauma cases from Afghanistan. Now I had to simultaneously care for four wounded, multisystem trauma
patients with one other surgeon, who was less than a year out of residency.
We actually thought we did okay. One guy had an abdominal fragment wound but was stable and had a
negative focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST). Two of the guys had extremity wounds
and fractures, but were able to be splinted and were not hemorrhaging. One guy, however, had a systolic blood
pressure (SBP) of 70 mm Hg, an inadequate improvised tourniquet on his leg, and open femur, tibial, and
fibular fractures. He also had an injury to his distal superficial femoral artery. We spent some time getting
proximal control in the groin, then dissecting out his artery through his huge, hematoma-laden, torn and
distorted thigh, and putting in a temporary vascular shunt. We transfused him most of our blood bank of 20
units of red blood cells (RBCs). He was hemodynamically stabilized. He was cold, slightly acidemic, and
coagulopathic when he left, but we had restored flow to his foot.
Sorting out all these casualties took us maybe one and one-half hours. We finally got them on a helicopter
and on their way about two hours after they arrived to us. When they arrived to the CSH, the patient with
the vascular injury had clotted off his shunt. He went back to the operating room (OR) at the CSH and was
revascularized, but had too much ischemia time and ended up losing his leg.
When the trauma consultant to the Surgeon General came to visit us at the FST a few weeks later, he noted
that it took him 17 minutes by slow-flying helicopter to get there from the CSH. As I reviewed the case with
him, we realized that rather than a vascular shunt, which ended up being harder than it sounded and cost us a
Modern Warfare | 5
20. lot of blood products and time, we could have simply applied secure tourniquets to this guy, resuscitated him,
and sent him on his way to the CSH. He would have reached a facility with vascular surgery support, robust
blood bank and critical care services, and everything else he needed within an hour.
Dr. Alec Beekley, LTC
United States Army Medical Corps
Upon arriving at your area of deployment, get to know your CCC environment and resources. Rapid
evacuation to a higher level of care may be the best contribution you provide to a casualty (Fig. 2). In some
Combat Support Hospitals, specialists from trauma surgery, orthopedics, vascular surgery, ophthalmology,
and critical care are available. Knowing the approximate evacuation time to a higher level of care may
change critical decisions of whether to operate on a critically injured patient who will ultimately need
transfer, or whether to transport immediately. What is the nearest Combat Support Hospital? How can
transport be arranged? What is the fastest method of transport and expected transport time? How many
critically-injured patients is your unit prepared to handle? If this number is exceeded, casualties who would
otherwise stay for operative intervention may instead need to be transferred.
Know your CCC environment and recognize your resources and limitations.
The nature of war is that it is unpredictable. In civilian surgical practice, although the number and acuity of
patients ebbs and flows, rarely is full capacity exceeded. In civilian urban settings, most injured patients are
only 15 to 20 minutes from a Level I or II trauma center, and mass casualties are uncommon. In a combat
environment, multiple-casualty-incidents are quite common (Fig. 3). The most common causes of injuries,
explosions or exchanges of gunfire, are likely to create several casualties at once. Time to reach medical
care may vary drastically not only by location, but by the tactical situation (i.e., ability to safely evacuate a
casualty from a combat area without excessive endangerment of others).
Figure 2. Level II FRSS-6/STP-7 in Southern Iraq in March,
2003.
6 | Modern Warfare
Figure 3. Initial evaluation and resuscitation during a multiple-casualtyincident occurring at the Surgical Shock Trauma Platoon (SSTP) at
Camp Taqaddum, Iraq 2006.
21. Although Level III Combat Support Hospitals are well equipped with trauma specialists, blood banks, and
multiple operating tables, many casualties first present to smaller, mobile medical and surgical units, such
as Army Forward Surgical Teams (FSTs) or Marine Corps Forward Resuscitative Surgical System (FRSS)
teams. Critical decisions on whether and when to intervene and when to transport critically ill casualties
are made in these smaller mobile facilities (Table 1). These decisions will change with every new location,
and even hour-by-hour with the availability of personnel, equipment, and transport. It is critical to know,
to the best extent possible, what is occurring on the battlefield to prepare for the arrival of casualties.
The chief surgeon or surgeon-of-the-day is usually the ultimate clinical decision maker and manages the
clinical function of the unit and its resources. Attention to details, situational awareness of both internal and
external conditions and good communication with the team are essential.
Service
Level II Facilities
Air Force
Mobile Field Surgical Team (MFST)
Expeditionary Medical Support (EMEDS)
Army
Level II Medical Treatment Facility (MTF)
Forward Surgical Team (FST)
Marine Corps
Forward Resuscitative Surgical System (FRSS)
Navy
Casualty Receiving and Treatment Ships (CRTS)
Table 1. Level II treatment facilities with surgical capabilities according to military service branch. Adapted
from Rasmussen, 2006.76
All surgeons at forward surgical facilities need to have situational awareness that extends beyond taking care
of patients in the operating room. The factors outlined in Table 2 are critical to optimal decision making.
Physicians in wartime are rarely fully prepared to treat combat-related injuries on their initial deployment.
Explosive injuries comprise the majority of severe combat-related injuries (Fig. 4).9,13 In peacetime, even
experienced surgeons rarely encounter injuries from explosions. Explosions combine primary blast, blunt,
and penetrating mechanisms to create multisystem, high-energy injuries with extensive soft-tissue damage,
wound contamination, and hemorrhage from multiple sites. In addition to encountering unfamiliar injury
patterns, newly deployed physicians must also learn a new medical system, with policies and logistics far
different from the civilian sector. While standards of medical care remain the same, physicians are challenged
to meet these standards in a new and often stressful environment.
Physicians in wartime are rarely fully prepared to treat combat-related injuries on their initial deployment.
Unfamiliar injury patterns, such as explosive injuries, and a new medical system with policies and logistics
differing from the civilian sector contribute to a unique and often stressful environment. Rehearsing
scenarios of care may prove beneficial to newly deployed careproviders.
Because time and circumstance may not afford a thorough orientation, it is critical to ask questions, learn
from those with experience, and become familiar with available resources before the arrival of your first
critically-injured patient. Care of the severely-injured combat casualty requires a team effort, and with
Modern Warfare | 7
22. Figure 4. (Left) US serviceman injured by a large mortar round explosion,
with traumatic amputation of the right hand, near amputation of the left
leg, and extensive soft-tissue wounds to the right leg. Image courtesy of the
Borden Institute, Office of The Surgeon General, Washington, DC.
Figure 5. (Below) FRSS patient care team at Forward Operating Base
St. Michael outside Mahmudiyah, Iraq in March 2004.
Forward Surgery - Lessons Learned
Triage Issues
• Triage Officer responsible for:
• Clinical function of facility
-Ultimate clinical decision maker
-Status of all casualties
-Consider tactical situation
• Management of available resources
-Personnel, supplies, ORs, blood bank
-Control of walking blood bank
• Initial triage of arriving casualty groups
• Evacuation priorities
Situational Awareness
• Internal
• Status personnel/supplies
• Number and physiologic status of
casualties
• OR availability
• Blood products
• En-route-care capability
• External
• Evacuation assets
• Time/distance to facility with resources to
provide appropriate care
• Weather conditions
• Tactical situation
Table 2. Forward Surgery - Lessons Learned.
every team there is a learning curve. An important lesson learned from Forward Surgical Teams has been
that teams need to rehearse scenarios of caring for multiple casualties before the first true casualties arrive
(Fig. 5). This is extremely critical to improving the skills of corpsman, medics, and nurses unfamiliar with
the care of critically-injured patients, and in improving the efficiency of physicians and the team. An open,
critical, and nonjudgmental review after every major casualty incident, a “hot wash,” has been found to
improve the performance of Forward Surgical Teams.15
8 | Modern Warfare
23. Joint Theater Trauma Registry (JTTR)
The civilian trauma systems and practice patterns in place today have emerged largely from the
lessons learned during wartime. Military medicine has been the driving force behind many of the major
advancements in trauma care. In the Civil War, the concept of a field hospital emerged, as did the link
between treatment time and survival rates. In World War I, blood banks and the use of blood transfusions
were developed. In World War II, antibiotics were put into widespread use, and the triage system was used
to prioritize casualty evacuations.16 The Korean War brought the development of Mobile Army Surgical
Hospital (MASH) units, and with Vietnam, improvements were made in rapid evacuation systems with
helicopters.16,17
Combat casualty care providers must use the lessons learned from wartime to improve subsequent patient
care. The military medical system is capable of adopting new changes more quickly and efficiently than is
the civilian sector, and the large number of severe injuries seen in a relatively short span of time allows for
rapid evaluation of new innovations.
With the aim of improving CCC, the US Army established the Joint Theater Trauma System (JTTS)
in 2004 to oversee the organization of medical facilities and resources as well as aeromedical evacuation
systems.18 Among its many roles, the JTTS has established the Joint Theater Trauma Registry (JTTR), an
extensive database of every United States (US) combat casualty.1 This comprehensive clinical database
now contains over 40,000 entries.19 The JTTR allows for retrospective analysis of the type and severity
of combat injuries and the identification of potentially survivable injuries. It is the cornerstone by which
performance improvement measures can be developed, implemented, and analyzed.
With over 40,000 entries, the JTTR has allowed retrospective analysis and actionable research of combat
injuries.
Data from medical charts, hospital records, transport
records, and elsewhere are gathered, reviewed,
and coded by a team of nurses and coders (Figs. 6
and 7). This allows for an unprecedented amount
of medical data to be collected on US casualties.
Important epidemiological questions, such as what
is the rate of primary amputation or what is the
percentage of thoracic injury with and without
body armor, can now be answered. Moreover, the
JTTR allows for analysis of changes that have been
implemented, such as: are decreased transport
times from the battlefield to medical aid associated
with an improvement in survival, or does the rate
of uncontrolled hemorrhage upon arrival to the
hospital decrease with an increase in tourniquet use?
Figure 6. An unprecedented amount of information is collected on US
casualties allowing retrospective analysis and actionable research. Image
courtesy of Defense Imagery Management Operations Center (DIMOC).
Modern Warfare | 9
24. PHYSICIAN TRAUMA ADMITTING RECORD (Theater Hospitalization Capability) - Previously Level 3
(All shaded areas mandatory for Joint Theater Trauma Registry data collection)
DATE:
VITAL SIGNS
TIME OF INJURY: _________________
TIME OF ARRIVAL: _____________
T_____ P____ R___ BP __/___ O2 Sat ___
LOCATION OF PRE-HOSP. CARE: ________________________________
HISTORY & PHYSICAL
R
L
INJURY DESCRIPTION
L
R
Pulses Present:
TRIAGE CATEGORY
Immediate
Minimal
Delayed
Expectant
MECHANISM OF INJURY
Assault/Fight
Helo Crash
Biological
Blast/Explosion
Hot Obj/Liquid
IED
D= Doppler
Blunt Trauma
Knife/Edge
A=Absent
Bomb
Landmine
Building Collapse
Machinery
Burn
Mortar
Chemical
Multi-frag
S= Strong
W= Weak
(AB)rasion
(AMP)utation
(AV)ulsion
(BL)eeding
(B)urn %TBSA_____
(C)repitus
(D)eformity
(DG)Degloving
(E)cchymosis
(FX)Fracture
(F)oreign Body
(GSW)Gun Shot Wound
(H)ematoma
(LAC)eration
(PW)Puncture Wound
(SS)Seatbelt Sign
Crush
MVC
Drowning
Plane Crash
Fall
Flying Debris
Rad/Nuclear
Single Frag
Grenade
UXO
GSW/Bullet
Other _________
CARE DONE PRIOR TO ARRIVAL
Pre-hospital Airway:
yes
Pre-hosp. Tourniquet :
ANTERIOR
no
no
yes Type: ____ TIME On:____ Off:______
Pre-hosp. Chest Tube:
POSTERIOR
no
HISTORY & PHYSICAL
Head & Neck:
Ty Membranes
mp
yes
no
Temp Control Measure:
________________________________________________________________________________________
Intraosseous Access:
________________________________________________________________________________________
yes
no
HISTORY AND PRESENTING ILLNESS: __________________________________
R
L
yes
Type:
(circle as applicable)
body bag
INITIAL PROCEDURES / DIAGNOSTICS
C-Collar
Intubate
Canthotomy (circle L/R)
Clear
R
L
Airway (oral/ nasal)
CRIC
Cantholysis (circle L/R)
Blood
Chest:
R
L
Chest tube
R
L
Needle decompression
Pericardiocentesis
Rectal Exam
Abdomen:
Tone_____
Gross Blood +/-
Pelvis:
Stable
Unstable
Output
R
L
Blood: mls _____
Output:
Prostate_____
Pelvic Binder
Foley
Closed Reduction
EXT Fixation
Splint
Wound Washout
Tourniquet Type CAT / SOFTT / Oth
Time On:_____
Lower extremities:
Closed reduction
E __/4
C-Spine Tender
Yes
No
Skin: Burn: 1st
2nd
3rd
R L
Brisk
R UE/LE
L UE/LE
CBC
L
A
B
O
R
A
T
O
R
Y
Vision: Pupils
Sluggish
NR
Hand Motion
%TBSA
CHEMISTRY 7
Light Perception
No Light Perception
Size_____mm
____mm
LFT
Time Off:_____
EXT Fixation
Splint
Wound washout
Time on:_____
Tourniquet Type CAT / SOFTT / Oth
Motor Deficit:
None
Time off:_____
Sedated
Chemically Paralyzed
HYPO / HYPERTHERMIA CONTROL MEASURES
Seizure Protocol
Mannitol
Intraosseus
Central Line
A-Line
Ending Temp ______________
Temperature Control Procedure
Bair Hugger
Chill Buster
Cooling Blanket
Time/date
Beginning Temp ______________
URINALYSIS
Time/date
Fwd Resus Fluid Warmer
Body Bag
Other __________________
ALLERGIES
Amylase: _____________________________
Alk Phos: _____________________________
Chem: _____________________
PCN
Micro: _____________________
Sulfa
SGOT: _______________________________
RBC: ______________________
Morphine
SGPT: _______________________________
WBC: _____________________
Codeine
Other:
ABG
NKDA
ASA
Bili: __________________________________
________/_______/_________
SpGr: _____________________
pH: _______________________
LDH: _________________________________
PT/ INR/ PTT
Air
DPL
NG/OG
Upper Extremities:
GCS:______
M __/6
V __/5
Air
Blood: mls ______
Thoracotomy
FAST
GYN______
Neuro:
other
Bact: ______________________
Latex
HCG: ______________________
MEDICATIONS
Other
IV FLUIDS/BLOOD PRODUCTS
PMH
FiO2: ___________________
VENT:
DT
Crystalloids ____________cc's
pH: ___________________
YES NO
Abx ____________________
Colloids ______________cc's
None
DM
pCO2: _________________ ETT Size: ____
Versed
PRBC's
Cardiac
Ulcer
pO2: ____________________
HCO3: __________________
Sat: ____________________
BE: _____________________
Morphine
Fentanyl
Other:
FFP
______________units
Whole Bld _______ _____units
Cryo
______________units
PLT's
______________packs
Respiratory
Seizure
Other
Patient NAME/ID:
Last:
SSN/ID
First
ASD(HA) September 2005 (March 2010 Interim Update)
NS
LR
_________
Unknown
HTN
DATE: (dd,mm,yy)
MTF transferred from:
MI
DOB/AGE
This Form is Subject to the Privacy Act of 1974
Page 1 of 2
Figure 7. Joint Theater Trauma Registry Treatment Record (front). Image courtesy of Joint Theater Trauma Systems Program, US Army Institute
of Surgical Research.
10 | Modern Warfare
25. By understanding how deaths and injuries occur, investigators are best able to identify potential areas
in which survival and other outcomes can be improved. Research by the JTTS and military healthcare
providers remains ongoing, resulting in continued improvements in products, techniques, and systems-level
aspects of medical care.
Combat Injury Patterns
Analysis of injury patterns and deaths during OEF and OIF indicates that most combat-related injuries
occur as a result of injury from explosions, followed by gunshot wounds.9,11 Only a small percentage of
injuries are related to motor vehicle accidents and other causes. Injury patterns demonstrate that the highest
rate of injury is to the extremities, followed by the abdomen, face, and head.9,11 There is a low rate of
thoracic injury, likely due to improvements in body armor.9, 10,12
Published data from the JTTR database from 2001 to 2005 demonstrated the following casualty data:9
• Mechanism of Injury – explosions (78 percent), gunshot wounds (18 percent)
• Injury Distribution – extremity (54 percent)
abdomen (11 percent)
face (10 percent)
head (8 percent)
thorax (6 percent)
eyes (6 percent)
neck (3 percent)
ears (3 percent)
With extremity injury, there is a high frequency of penetrating soft-tissue injury and associated fractures
due to explosive fragments and gunshots (Fig. 8). Accordingly, there is a much higher proportion of open
fractures in combat casualties compared to civilian practice.11,20
Causes of Preventable Death
Analysis of JTTR statistics and data from prior
conflicts has demonstrated that hemorrhage is by
far the leading cause of potentially preventable
combat-related death.13,21 The case fatality rate
has decreased significantly since Vietnam, from
16.5 percent to 8.8 percent.1 The improvements
in mortality are due not only to advancements in
CCC, but improvements in body armor and rapid
evacuation. A large part of the JTTS’s mission is
to analyze casualties, both wounded and killed,
for the purpose of identifying, implementing, and
evaluating potential improvements at any point in
the medical system from first response to long-term
care and rehabilitation.
Figure 8. Fragmentation wound with near complete traumatic amputation
of the right arm. The injury was nonsalvageable and required a completion
amputation. Image courtesy of CDR Subrato Deb.
Modern Warfare | 11
26. Figure 9. Injury caused by a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) resulting in a large through-and-through wound to the left thigh and traumatic amputation
of the lower right leg. Note the makeshift tourniquet applied in the field.
Hemorrhage, much of which is considered compressible or amenable to tourniquet placement, is the
leading cause of preventable combat-related death.
In Vietnam, casualties were described in the Wound Data and Munitions Effectiveness Team (WDMET)
database.22 From an analysis of the Vietnam casualties who ultimately died, but had survived until reaching
medical care, a committee of surgeons deemed 8 to 17 percent of the deaths were potentially preventable
with modern medical care.21 The causes of these deaths included severe hemorrhage, burns, pulmonary
edema, and sepsis. Furthermore, review of Vietnam data attributes over 2,500 deaths to extremity
hemorrhage, which is potentially preventable (Fig. 9).
In the early years of the OEF and OIF (2001 to 2004), up to 15 percent of deaths were deemed potentially
survivable. By far, the leading cause of these deaths was uncontrolled hemorrhage (82 percent), much of
which was considered compressible or amenable to tourniquet placement.13 Review of data has shown
that over the past several wars (Korea, Vietnam, and the first Persian Gulf War), the killed in action (KIA)
rate had not changed significantly.23,24 The KIA rate refers to the percentage of casualties who die before
12 | Modern Warfare
27. reaching a medical facility out of all seriously injured casualties, and has been 20 to 25 percent since World
War II.24 In OEF and OIF, the KIA rate has decreased to 13.8 percent. Additionally, the case fatality rate,
the percentage of severely wounded casualties who die, has decreased by half since Vietnam.24 Of those
KIA, the most common causes are severe head injury and severe thoracic trauma. However, 9 percent of
those KIA die from hemorrhage from extremity wounds, 5 percent from tension pneumothorax, and 1
percent of airway obstruction. This group comprises most of the deaths considered potentially preventable
(15 percent of those KIA) and has become the focus of many of the improvements in the medical system.
Since many of these fatalities occur within the first couple of hours after injury, large efforts have been made
to improve the early medical access and response.
Advances in Combat Casualty Care
Since the recognition of hemorrhage as the major cause of potentially preventable death, a tremendous
effort has been made to improve hemorrhage control and treatment of other survivable injuries. Rapid
evacuation, expanded training, improved equipment, and a change in resuscitative and surgical techniques
are some of the approaches discussed in greater detail below and in the chapters that follow.
Advancements in Combat Casualty Care Training
The golden hour and its associated platinum ten minutes of trauma response lies in the hands of first
responders. On the battlefield, this is often another soldier, a combat lifesaver, or combat medic. In World
War II, Vietnam, and OEF and OIF, the vast majority of combat deaths occur before the casualty reaches
a medical facility. 24
Most medics, physicians and other medical personnel, and all Special Operations Forces (SOF) personnel
undergo a Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) training course. The TCCC course was developed
to teach deployed careproviders key elements of lifesaving prehospital medical care.25 Among the core
curriculum, techniques in hemorrhage control,
needle thoracostomy, casualty positioning, and even
on-site cricothyroidotomy are taught.25 Tactical
Combat Casualty Care was begun by the Naval
Special Warfare Command in 1993 and later
continued by the US Special Operations Command
(USSOCOM). Much of its development came from
a 1996 study outlining guidelines for combat care
for Special Operations corpsmen and has since been
expanded to all branches.25
Injury care will often need to be delivered while an
area is still under hostile fire, delaying the initial
arrival of medical personnel and equipment (Fig.
10). Prior to evacuation, available patient care
equipment is limited to what can be carried by the
first responder. Equipment such as stethoscopes and
Figure 10. US soldiers run for cover after a simulated bomb explosion
during a casualty evacuation exercise in the mock village of Medina Wasl
at the National Training Center (NTC), Fort Irwin, California. Image
courtesy of Defense Imagery Management Operations Center (DIMOC).
Modern Warfare | 13
28. blood pressure cuffs are not available, and would not often be useful in a noisy environment. First responders
must rely on basic visual and physical examination findings to dictate treatment. Casualty evacuation times
are widely variable, ranging from minutes to hours, depending on the tactical situation and resources.
Given these constraints, TCCC training was designed to incorporate several principles that may depart
from the standard approach to civilian trauma. These include:
• Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is not attempted for a casualty with no signs of life
• Airway management and cervical spine immobilization are delayed until the casualty and
rescuer are both removed from hostile fire
• Casualties found unconscious, but breathing, are given a nasopharyngeal airway and placed in
the recovery position
• Only the minimal amount of clothing is removed to identify and treat injuries to minimize
hypothermia
• Control of bleeding is paramount and takes precedence over all other efforts, including
obtaining intravenous access and extrication from vehicles
• Early use of a tourniquet and hemostatic dressings are encouraged in the setting of hemorrhage
• Intravenous access is not attempted for casualties with superficial wounds, a strong radial pulse,
and a normal Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) motor score
Figure 11. US soldiers from Charlie Company, 4th Battalion, 23th
Infantry Regiment conduct a foot patrol in the Helmand province of
Afghanistan in January, 2010. Image courtesy of Defense Imagery
Management Operations Center (DIMOC).
14 | Modern Warfare
Figure 12. Tension pneumothorax, a cause of potentially preventable
battlefield death, may be treated by needle decompression.
29. Equipment Changes
Body Armor
Expansion in the use of body armor, improvements in its surface area coverage, and enhancement of
the armor’s ability to deflect high-velocity projectiles are believed to explain the lower overall incidence
of thoracic injury during OEF and OIF (Fig. 11).1,9 Early studies also suggest body armor decreases the
incidence of abdominal injuries.10,26,27 Technological improvements in body armor are believed to contribute
to the improvement in survival seen since Vietnam. Body armor came into widespread use during Operation
Desert Storm, and its use further expanded during the current conflicts. In Vietnam, the rate of thoracic
injury was 13 percent, in OEF and OIF, this rate has decreased to 5 percent.9 Moreover, an analysis of
casualties in 2004 demonstrated a rate of thoracic injury of 18 percent in those without body armor, and
less than 5 percent in those wearing armor.1 Despite the decrease in thoracic injuries, tension pneumothorax
has been recognized as a potentially preventable cause of battlefield death (Fig. 12).13,21 This resulted in the
training of most SOF in the technique of needle thoracostomy. First responders now carry a large-bore
needle as part of their battlefield equipment.
Hemorrhage Control Adjuncts
Tourniquets, rarely used in the civilian sector, have become a standard part of every soldier’s equipment,
and all medics and SOF personnel have been trained in their use (Fig. 13). In the past, tourniquets were
avoided due to concerns regarding their misuse leading to limb ischemia and lack of adequate hemorrhage
control. However, this scenario typically was associated with makeshift tourniquets, such as a bandage and
a stick, which were often improperly applied.
Figure 13. (Above) The Combat Application Tourniquet®. Liberal
use is recommended for uncontrolled extremity hemorrhage in the tactical
environment. Image courtesy of North American Rescue, LLC.
Figure 14. (Right) A casualty arrives at the SSTP at Camp Taqaddum,
with Combat Application Tourniquets in place. Image courtesy of CDR
Subrato Deb.
Modern Warfare | 15
30. Tourniquets save lives. Improved survival is associated with tourniquet placement before the onset of
shock, while timely removal avoids complications.
Newly designed tourniquets combined with improved widespread training on tourniquet use have played a
major role in improving hemorrhage control following combat injury.28 This is especially true in battlefield
or other austere environments, when access to definitive care may be delayed. At the start of OEF and
OIF, there was very little tourniquet use. However, tourniquets are now applied following nearly every
severe extremity injury (Fig. 14).29 A 2008 study of severe extremity injury in an OIF Combat Support
Hospital deemed that tourniquets are effective in controlling hemorrhage with no increased incidence of
significant limb ischemia or early adverse outcomes.29 Kragh et al. conducted the first prospective study of
2,838 casualties with major limb trauma admitted to a Level III Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad, and
demonstrated survival benefit associated with tourniquet use.28 Improved survival was also associated with
placement of tourniquets prior to the onset of clinical signs of shock. Of the 232 patients who received 428
tourniquets (applied to 309 injured limbs), transient nerve palsy was the only adverse outcome attributed to
their use.28,30 If removed within six hours of application, tourniquets save lives without causing limb damage
or secondary amputation.
Topical hemostatic agents may be used as adjuncts in the treatment of noncompressible hemorrhage.
Figure 15. QuikClot® applied to a large penetrating fragmentation wound of the left shoulder.
16 | Modern Warfare
31. Hemostatic, clot-promoting agents, such as Combat Gauze™, WoundStat™ granules, Celox™ powder,
QuikClot® and HemCon™ dressings, have been used for bleeding not immediately controllable with direct
pressure, pressure points, or tourniquet use (Fig. 15).31,32,33 These hemostatic agents were developed for use
in conjunction with the standard techniques of hemorrhage control, including direct pressure, elevation,
and pressure point use. Some form of hemostatic dressing is now given to every individual in a combat
zone. Animal models and early studies from OEF and OIF demonstrate the superiority of many of these
dressings over standard gauze dressings and describe safety considerations surrounding their use.31,32,33 A
more detailed discussion of combat dressings is provided in the Damage Control Resuscitation chapter.
Organizational Innovations
Beyond new products and techniques, there has
been improvement in the trauma and evacuation
systems at organizational levels. Since 2003, the
trauma system has been organized into levels of
care designed to minimize the time from injury to
treatment, and to provide a continuum of care.
Forward Surgical Teams are small, mobile units
capable of performing a limited number of lifesaving
surgeries. These FSTs have been organized into
rapidly responsive and efficient units. The process
of casualty evacuation from the battlefield, to the
initial level of surgical care, and then on to definitive
care facilities in Germany and the United States,
has dramatically improved in speed and capability.
Figure 16. An en-route-care nurse helps package a critically-injured
These rapid evacuation systems have enabled casualty for transport in the operating room at Camp Taqaddum, Iraq.
casualties to reach forward medical facilities in
minutes rather than hours. The military is now able
to transfer ventilated, critically ill patients from forward surgical sites near point-of-injury, over distances of
thousands of miles while providing state-of-the-art critical care en-route (Fig. 16).
Echelons of Care
To meet wartime needs, CCC and evacuation are organized by echelons of care. In this context, the word
echelon refers to level of command and control. The medical care delivered at each echelon of the battlefield
corresponds with respective levels of care (e.g., Level II care is delivered in Echelon II) (Fig. 17).
Echelon I
Self-aid,
buddy-aid,
medic,
Battalion Aid
n
Station
Echelon II
Echelon III
Echelon IV
Echelon V
Forward
Surgical Team
Combat
Support
Hospital
Landstuhl,
Germany
CONUS
Facility
Figure 17. Evacuation chain for combat casualties.
Modern Warfare | 17
32. Trauma system activation in OEF and OIF occurs
well before the combat casualty reaches the hospital.
On the battlefield, the first medical responder to
a casualty is usually another soldier or a combat
medic, who in some instances will rapidly move the
patient to a Battalion Aid Station. Care provided
by the first responder through the Battalion Aid
Station is considered Level I. The first response
may occur when still under fire or in dangerous
circumstances, and only limited equipment may
be available. The combat medic assesses whether
the casualty will require immediate evacuation and
responds to immediately life-threatening injuries
(Fig. 18). Most commonly, this includes control of
hemorrhage using tourniquets as first-line therapy
if care is being delivered under fire. Once the
casualty and first responder are no longer under fire,
hemorrhage control may be reassessed. Depending
on the findings upon reassessment, hemorrhage
control may either be augmented with additional
tourniquets or hemostatic dressings, or controlled
with a less stringent method (e.g., pressure dressing).
Figure 18. Combat medics evacuate a wounded casualty on a Black
Hawk helicopter. Image courtesy of the Borden Institute, Office of The
Surgeon General, Washington, DC.
Rapid evacuation systems have enabled combat casualties to reach forward medical facilities in minutes
rather than hours. For patients requiring evacuation, the goal is to reach surgical care within one hour of
injury.
For patients requiring evacuation, the goal is to reach surgical care within one hour of injury. Depending
on the location, the casualty may initially reach either a Level II or Level III facility. Transport from pointof-injury or a Level I facility to a Level II or III facility is termed casualty evacuation (CASEVAC). A
Level II facility is typically made up of a FST, capable of providing immediate, life-sustaining resuscitation
and surgery until the patient can reach a higher-level facility for definitive treatment and longer-term
care. Most FSTs consist of five to 20 personnel, including at least three surgeons, an orthopaedic surgeon,
nurse anesthetists, critical care nurses, and technicians.34 Forward Surgical Team personnel are capable of
rapid assembly and takedown of the facility. The facility comprises two operating tables and a blood bank
supplying 20 to 50 units of packed RBCs. Most FST facilities now carry plasma and recombinant factor
VIIa. These FST facilities logistically support up to 30 operations before needing to resupply. The FST
facilities typically do not have plain radiography capacity, but most have portable ultrasound machines.
Physicians should become proficient in the use of ultrasound for the evaluation of a combat casualty.
Forward surgical units offer a highly effective combination of proximity and capability for patients who
cannot be evacuated rapidly to a Combat Surgical Hospital. Determining the ideal relationship between
proximity to surgical care and the capability of the surgical unit, however, remains a challenge. In many
cases, the tactical situation has permitted rapid helicopter casualty evacuation directly to a Level III facility,
18 | Modern Warfare
33. approaching that of transporting a civilian trauma patient to a regional Level-one trauma center in the
United States. Inclement weather, the inability to land a casualty evacuation helicopter close to an active
firefight, or a high volume of casualties arriving at the closest Level III facility may preclude this practice
in theater. Similarly, remote combat operations may not allow timely transport of a surgical patient to
a Combat Support Hospital. In these situations, the forward surgical unit’s mobility and sophisticated
capabilities provide valuable resources.
The physical and logistical resources required to provide life and limb-salvaging care to severely injured
casualties are considerable. Managing several combat casualties over a relatively short timeframe (24 hours)
can completely overwhelm a unit. The logistical support, communications, security, and ability to transfer
postoperative patients are as essential to the success of these units as is their forward location. Thoughtful
consideration of the tactical solution is needed to balance the benefits of enhanced proximity afforded by
small and mobile forward surgical units against the disadvantages of dispersing resources and experience
throughout the battlespace. Dispersion of small surgical units across the combat theater without including
them in an integrated trauma system will not be effective. As noted by Dr. Ogilvie in commenting on the
success of the Forward Surgical Teams used by the British 8th Army fighting the German Afrika Corps in
the North African desert during World War II, “This point must be insisted on, because there is constant
temptation on the part of keen medical administrative officers to push forward their surgeons beyond the
point where they can do useful work, and for surgeons there to undertake more than lifesaving surgery with
the splendid folly that prompted the charge of the Light Brigade.”35
Level III facilities include Combat Support Hospitals and are significantly larger, semi-permanent hospitals
capable of providing immediate patient resuscitation, temporizing and definitive surgeries, medium-term
intensive care unit (ICU), and postoperative care for hundreds of patients.1 At this level, surgical specialties
including orthopedics, neurosurgery, maxillofacial surgery, urology and ophthalmology are available. All
have plain radiography and fluoroscopy, and some have computed tomography (CT) capability. Level III
facilities often treat host nation casualties in addition to military casualties (Fig. 19). As of 2005, there were
three Army-based Combat Support Hospitals in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, as well as one Air Force
Theater Hospital in Iraq. Most have five to 10 trauma bays, two to five operating rooms, and about 10 to
20 ICU beds (Fig. 20).
United States casualties requiring longer-term care
are then evacuated to a Level IV facility. Nearly all
US casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan are evacuated
to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany,
a large hospital offering all surgical specialties and
rehabilitation. Finally, US casualties not expected to
return to duty are ultimately evacuated back to the
Continental United States (CONUS) to a Level V
facility. These include Brooke Army Medical Center,
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, National Naval
Medical Center Bethesda, and almost all of the triservice major medical centers.
Figure 19. Outside the room of a 14-year-old host national patient who
sustained blast-related injuries and was treated at a Level III facility in
Balad AB, Iraq.
Modern Warfare | 19
34. The Balance of Forward Surgery
Forward Surgery
Proximity
Flexibility
?
Limited Capability
Dispersion of Resources
Potential for Stagnation
Larger Units
Capability
Synergism
Experience
Slow Moving
Decreased Proximity
Figure 20. Important considerations in casualty evacuation (CASEVAC). The prime objective is to stabilize and transport
the wounded from the battlefield to the nearest appropriate medical facility available, in the most expedient fashion.
Patient Evacuation and Transport
“The stated vision of the JTTS was to ensure that every soldier, marine, sailor, or airman injured on
the battlefield has the optimal chance for survival and maximal potential for functional recovery. In other
words, to get the right patient to the right place at the right time.”1 The rapid and efficient evacuation of
a large number of casualties, including those with critical injuries, has been one of the major advances in
OEF and OIF. Most severely injured casualties can be rapidly transported from the field by helicopter via
casualty evacuation (CASEVAC), or between Level II and Level III care facilities as a medical evacuation
(MEDEVAC) (Fig. 21). The CASEVAC system is designed for speed over medical capability. The helicopter
may not contain medical equipment and the crew may have little or no medical training. Medical evacuation
crews have medical training and fly in designated helicopters with some medical equipment.36 Helicopters
are equipped with both a flight crew and medical team, and critically ill casualties are accompanied by an
Figure 21. A pair of Army Black Hawk helicopters take off from Balad
AB to perform a MEDEVAC. The MEDEVAC crews are a critical link
in the chain of events to ensure casualties in Iraq are transported to the next
level of care within one hour of being injured. Image courtesy of Defense
Imagery Management Operations Center (DIMOC).
20 | Modern Warfare
Figure 22. USAF Critical Care Air Transport Teams (CCATTs) have
enabled the movement of critically ill patients, even in the midst of ongoing
resuscitation.
35. en-route-care nurse who manages the patient during transport from Level I or II to Level III. Casualties are
transported from the battlefield to the nearest medical facility (usually a Level II facility) either by ground
transport or helicopter. Distance, weather, ground conditions, availability, number of casualties and severity
of injury are among the factors used to determine which mode of transport will be used.37
The US Marine Corps utilizes en-route-care (critical care nurses) to provide ongoing management of
ventilated, critically ill patients during transport from a forward unit to Level III care. These nurses belong
to the forward unit and are not part of the air transport unit. After completion of transfer to Level III
facilities they return to their originating unit. En-route nursing care is an indispensable link as patients move
from Level I through Level III facilities. During the three busiest periods of First Marine Expeditionary
Force (I MEF) Operations in Iraq (2003, 2004, and 2006) more than 600 en-route-care missions, moving
675 patients, were flown from Level II to Level III facilities. This accounted for 16 percent of all combat
casualties during that time. Virtually all (99.5 percent) of the patients arrived safely at Level III. There
were four patients who arrived unstable and all had severe injuries. All four were nonpreventable deaths on
review (unpublished data, USMC 2008). Unfortunately, this was not always the case for patients transported
without nursing care. Although further refinements and increased training for en-route-care between Level
II and III units are necessary, this practice is an important step forward in CCC.
An aeromedical evacuation system was developed during OEF and OIF for long-range transportation.
This system has transported thousands of casualties by fixed-wing aircraft since its inception.38 In
Vietnam, transporting an injured casualty back to the United States typically took well over a month.
With the advancements in aeromedical transport in OEF and OIF, most casualties reach Germany or
the United States within 36 hours of injury.4,36,38 This rapid transfer of care carries the risk of losing key
information along the way. Communication between the transport team and receiving careproviders is
critically important during such transfers. The medical capabilities of aeromedical aircraft and personnel
have significantly advanced, and these aircraft function as a ‘mobile ICU’ (Fig. 22).
With advancements in aeromedical transport during OEF and OIF, most casualties reach Germany or the
United States within 36 hours of injury.
Transport of the most critically ill patients is conducted by Critical Care Air Transport Teams (CCATTs).
Each CCATT is staffed with at least one physician and two critical care nurses, with the capability to
transport critically ill ventilated patients for eight to 12 hours at a time, to a higher level of care. The
CCATTs were developed in 1994 by the US Air Force and allow for postoperative transport of patients
to Level IV and V hospitals where continuing intensive care, secondary operations, and rehabilitation can
occur. Evacuation out of theater to Level IV and V facilities is termed air evacuation (AIREVAC). This
enables Combat Support Hospitals in Iraq and Afghanistan to preserve their ICU and surgical resources.
Since casualties with injuries not allowing them to return to duty will rapidly move through the system and
rarely spend significant time at any specific level of care, communication of key information concerning
their injuries and treatment is essential for optimal care. This is most problematic in an immature theater
where communications and bandwidth are limited. Under these circumstances, multiple methods of
transferring information have been utilized. These include paper records, writing on patients or dressings,
and direct verbal transfer by accompanying medical personnel (Fig. 23). Additionally, items such as
Modern Warfare | 21
36. handheld portable dictaphones and even memory
sticks with downloaded photos of injuries and paper
records have been tried with varying success. In a
mature theater with established communication
capability, availability of the Joint Patient Tracking
Application (JPTA) – a web-based application that
allows users to obtain real-time information, e-mail,
and direct phone communication – have simplified
transferring medical information and providing
feedback to forward units on outcomes.1
Damage Control Strategies
Beyond new products and training, there has been
a significant change in the management of critically Figure 23. Improvised patient information communication strategy.
injured patients reaching a medical facility, termed Patient information is written directly onto the dressing of a patient
emerging from a damage control laparotomy. Image courtesy of the Borden
damage control resuscitation (DCR). Damage Institute, Office of The Surgeon General, Washington, DC.
control resuscitation emphasizes resuscitation with
hemostatic blood products and focuses on rapid control of bleeding and immediately life-threatening injuries.
Its counterpart, damage control surgery (DCS) focuses only on immediately critical surgical interventions
and delays more definitive care of injuries until the patient can be stabilized. In conjunction, these practices
aim to prevent the lethal triad of acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy.
Damage Control Resuscitation
The recognition of hemorrhage as the primary cause of preventable combat death led to significant changes
in the initial resuscitation of severely injured patients.13,21 Most death due to hemorrhage occurs within six to
24 hours of injury. This makes hemorrhage control, reversing coagulopathy, and restoring tissue perfusion
critical. Advanced Trauma and Life Support (ATLS) curriculum recommends aggressive resuscitation with
crystalloids both in the prehospital and hospital settings.39 Moreover, when a massive transfusion is required,
conventional practice involves transfusion of packed RBCs first, with addition of platelets and clotting
factors only after the transfusion of a full blood volume (e.g., five liters).39
Conventional resuscitation practices have been significantly influenced by recent CCC experiences in OEF
and OIF. Upon arriving at a hospital setting, many severely injured casualties are already coagulopathic.
One-third or more of combat casualties present with an international normalized ratio (INR) of 1.5 or
greater.40 Aggressive resuscitation with crystalloid and packed red cells worsens coagulopathy through
dilution, promotion of hypothermia, and worsening of acidosis.40 This lethal triad of acidosis, hypothermia,
and coagulopathy has a downward spiral effect characterized by acidosis and hypothermia worsening
coagulopathy, leading to progressive hemorrhaging, which itself worsens all three conditions (Fig. 24). Each
of the three conditions has been shown to be an independent predictor of mortality in severely injured
casualties.40
22 | Modern Warfare
37. Coagulopathy
Hypothermia
Metabolic
Acidosis
Figure 24. The lethal triad of acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy. Acidosis and hypothermia worsen
coagulopathy, leading to progressive hemorrhage and worsening of all three arms of the triad.
With conventional resuscitation practices, aggressive resuscitation with crystalloid solutions worsens
coagulopathy through hemodilution, promotion of hypothermia, and worsening of acidosis. In contrast,
DCR emphasizes resuscitation with hemostatic blood products, rapid control of bleeding and immediately
life-threatening injuries, prevention of hypothermia, permissive hypotension, and minimal use of
crystalloids.
Typical crystalloid fluids, including 0.9% normal saline and lactated Ringer’s solution, have a pH of
5.5 and 6.6, respectively.41 They are often infused in large quantities through large peripheral intravenous
catheters in prehospital and early resuscitative settings. These crystalloid fluids cause a lowering of blood
pH and a dilutional effect on the platelets and clotting factors needed to control bleeding. Despite attempts
at warming these crystalloid fluids prior to infusion, they are rarely administered at body temperature
and frequently contribute to patient hypothermia. Prolonged transport times between initial injury and
arrival to medical care further potentiate the risk for hypothermia in combat casualties. Acidosis results
primarily from production of lactate and other metabolic byproducts due to anaerobic metabolism, a result
of inadequate tissue perfusion during patient shock. While crystalloids lower pH, massive transfusion of
blood products is thought to promote acidemia as well.42 Stored RBCs are thought to have a pH of 7.15 or
lower.43 Transfusion of large quantities of stored RBCs may have a profound lowering effect on body pH.
The goal of DCR is to reverse the three components of the lethal triad and rapidly control hemorrhage.
Damage control resuscitation applies to both initial resuscitative efforts as well as the first 24 to 48 hours of
postoperative ICU care. Novel aspects of DCR include permissive hypotension, minimal use of crystalloids,
rapid transfusion of blood products in an RBC-to-plasma-to-platelet ratio of 1:1:1, aggressive prevention
of hypothermia with warm blankets and fluids, use of fresh whole blood (FWB) when available, and the use
of new products, including hemostatic agents and recombinant factor VIIa, when appropriate for severe
hemorrhage.44
An important aspect of DCR is early recognition of critically ill combat casualties who will require massive
Modern Warfare | 23
38. transfusion and are susceptible to the aforementioned issues surrounding resuscitation. Limited blood
product availability, lab capability, and personnel at forward resuscitative or surgical sites create the need for
judicious utilization of resources. The rapid and precise recognition of casualties requiring DCR has been
aided by injury pattern recognition. Casualties who present with any of the injury patterns shown in Table
3 are likely to need massive transfusion and should be treated by DCR techniques.
Rapid Recognition Of Casualties Requiring DCR By Injury Pattern
• Truncal, axillary, neck, or groin bleeding not controlled by tourniquets or hemostatic
dressings
• Major proximal traumatic amputations or mangled extremity
• Multiple long-bone or pelvic fractures
• Large soft-tissue injuries with uncontrolled bleeding
• Large hemothorax (greater than 1,000 milliliters)
• Large hemoperitoneum
Table 3. Injury patterns as predictors of massive transfusion.
Permissive Hypotension
Trauma patients suffering from severe injury, such as limb amputation, often arrive at medical care facilities
with minimal bleeding. Once resuscitation is initiated, patients start rebleeding, often uncontrollably. Since
rate of hemorrhage has a direct relationship with mean arterial pressure, it is postulated that lower blood
pressures may slow the rate of hemorrhage, allow for clotting to occur, and help preserve blood volume.44
Thus, some degree of hypotension may be protective in preventing further hemorrhage in critically injured
patients. This must be weighed against the effect of hypotension on end-organ perfusion leading to multiple
organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS).45
Traditional ATLS teaching calls for two large-bore intravenous catheter insertions in the prehospital setting
with immediate aggressive crystalloid replacement.39 However, numerous animal-model studies suggest that
this leads to poorer outcomes in both blunt and penetrating trauma, perhaps due to interference with normal
physiologic responses to hemorrhage.46,47,48 In combat settings, casualties now receive minimal crystalloid
or blood products in the field. Combat medics practice permissive hypotension, allowing for a mild degree
of hypotension (systolic blood pressure of 90 mm Hg) in patients with a normal mental status.49,50 In the
field, this translates to a palpable radial pulse in an alert patient. The goal is to prevent the conversion
of controlled hemorrhagic shock to uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock in severely injured casualties before
reaching definitive care.
In a combat setting, patients without evidence of head injury who exhibit a normal mental status and a
palpable radial pulse should not receive intravenous fluids.
Blood Product Transfusion Ratios
Although the definition of massive transfusion varies, the term is commonly applied to a transfusion of 10
units of RBCs or greater within a 24-hour period (Figs. 25 and 26).51 Most combat and civilian casualties do
24 | Modern Warfare
39. Figure 25. Running tally of blood products administered, posted on the
wall above a casualty’s bed. The casualty sustained injuries from multiple
transabdominal gunshot wounds.
Figure 26. The need for massive transfusion should be determined early.
Approximately 8 percent of combat casualties require massive transfusion.
Image courtesy of the Borden Institute, Office of The Surgeon General,
Washington, DC.
not require massive transfusion. In the civilian setting, it is required in only 1 to 3 percent of trauma cases.
In a combat setting, the frequency is higher due to the increased incidence of penetrating trauma and blast
injury. In OIF, the rate is 8 percent, compared with up to 16 percent during Vietnam.52
In a combat setting, the frequency of massive transfusion is higher due to the increased incidence of
penetrating trauma and blast injury.
The aim of RBC transfusion is to restore the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood, replace lost volume,
and restore tissue perfusion. For patients requiring several units of RBCs, conventional teaching was that
replacement of platelets and clotting factors due to dilution was not required until the patient had been
transfused a full blood volume. Thus, most massive transfusions have been heavily weighted towards RBC
transfusion before other blood products were added, resulting in low plasma-to-RBC and platelet-to-RBC
ratios. Multiple retrospective studies of both civilian and combat trauma patients have shown an increase
in mortality, particularly in death due to hemorrhage, associated with low plasma-to-RBC and plateletto-RBC ratios.53,54,55 In a 2008 study by Holcomb et al., a review of 466 civilian patients requiring massive
transfusion demonstrated that patients receiving higher amounts of plasma and platelet transfusion in
the context of massive transfusion had decreased truncal hemorrhage. This subset of patients also had
increased six-hour, 24-hour, and 30-day survival, had less ICU and ventilator days, and spent fewer days in
the hospital.55
Blood product transfusion studies following combat-related injuries have shown the same trends. A 2008
study by Spinella et al. reviewed 708 patients in Combat Support Hospitals who required at least one unit
of RBC transfusion. Each unit of RBCs transfused was associated with increased mortality, while each unit
of plasma transfused was associated with increased survival.56 Similarly, a 2007 study by Borgman et al.
reviewed 246 patients at Combat Support Hospitals requiring massive transfusions and divided them into
three groups based on the ratio of plasma-to-RBCs received. The three groups had the same median injury
severity score of 18. The group with the lowest ratio (median 1 plasma: 8 RBC units) had significantly
higher overall mortality (65 percent) and death due to hemorrhage (92.5 percent) compared to the high ratio
Modern Warfare | 25
40. group (median 1 plasma: 1.4 RBC units), which had a 19 percent mortality and 37 percent rate of death
due to hemorrhage.53
Such studies have led to a paradigm shift in the provision of massive blood transfusion in combat casualties,
with a low-ratio goal approaching 1:1:1 for RBCs, plasma, and platelets. This has led to significant changes
in blood banking practices. For instance, since plasma is frozen, Combat Support Hospitals now pre-thaw
fresh frozen plasma (FFP) daily to ensure rapid availability.
Role of Fresh Whole Blood
With the advent of a low-ratio goal (e.g., 1:1:1) for massive blood product transfusion in combat casualties,
the ideal blood replacement in the context of hemorrhage may be whole blood, rather than component
transfusion.57,58,59 Whole blood contains the most physiologic ratio of red cells, platelets, clotting factors,
and fibrinogen. Secondarily, one unit of whole blood contains overall less volume than the equivalent in
blood components, which can be important in patients receiving massive transfusion who are at high risk of
third-spacing fluids and developing pulmonary edema. A retrospective study of 354 patients with traumatic
hemorrhagic shock receiving blood transfusion found both one-day and 30-day survivals were higher in the
fresh whole blood cohort as compared to the component therapy group.57
In addition to the problems associated with dilutional effects when RBCs alone are transfused, the age of
stored RBCs is also associated with an increase in mortality.60 The average lifespan of an RBC is 120 days,
and this is traditionally the maximum storage time for a unit of frozen RBCs. As red cells age, an increasing
number of cells will die or become damaged and release intracellular products. In animal models, transfusion
of stored RBCs has been shown to cause release of inflammatory mediators and result in higher infection
rates.61 In addition, as red cells age, their oxygen-carrying capacity per unit diminishes and the restoration
of tissue perfusion decreases, which may have adverse clinical effects.62
Recent investigation has given significant attention to the use of warm fresh whole blood (FWB) for massive
transfusion required in a combat setting. The use of FWB started during World War I, initially out of necessity
due to limited supplies of blood components in
combat hospital settings. Transfusion practices have
been revised during OEF and OIF to increase the
safety and efficiency of the process.44 When the
number and severity of casualties exceeded the
ability of blood banks to keep up with transfusion
requirements, walking blood banks were established
to rapidly increase the supply of available blood in
disaster scenarios (Fig. 27). Whole blood donated by
military personnel, prescreened and blood-typed,
can be rapidly cross-matched and available for use
within hours without being divided into components.
Though initially developed out of necessity, the
use of warm FWB is now under investigation
as a potentially superior approach compared to Figure 27. Military personnel donate blood at the Walking Blood Bank,
Camp Taqaddum, Iraq in 2006.
component therapy for massive transfusion.57,63
26 | Modern Warfare
41. Whole blood donated by military personnel, prescreened and blood-typed, can be rapidly cross-matched
and available for use within hours without being divided into components.
Role of Recombinant Factor VIIa
Recombinant factor VIIa has been under study for its use in severe hemorrhage.64,65 Currently, recombinant
factor VIIa (rFVIIa) is Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved for severe bleeding in patients with
factor VII deficiency. It is, however, being used off-label for patients with normal coagulation systems with
life-threatening hemorrhage. Its first use in trauma was reported in 1999, and it is now used in military
and civilian settings for trauma patients and for intraoperative hemorrhage.64,65 Its off-label use has not yet
been standardized and transfusion criteria, dosing, and redosing guidelines are still under investigation.
Animal studies have indicated prolonged survival times and earlier control of hemorrhage associated with
its use, and human case reports suggest that fewer blood products are required in hemorrhaging patients
who receive rFVIIa.64,65,66 Early randomized control trials of rFVIIa for bleeding control during various
surgical procedures and in coagulopathic populations did not show reduction in mortality or transfusion
requirements.67,68,69 A 2005 randomized controlled trial of the use of rFVIIa versus placebo found rFVII
demonstrated a reduction in the transfusion requirements for blunt trauma patients receiving rFVIIa, and
a similar but nonsignificant trend in the penetrating trauma group.64 Other types of studies, such as case
series, meta-analyses and post-hoc analyses of randomized controlled trials have demonstrated trends
(albeit statistically insignificant) toward improved outcomes.70,71,72 Concerns regarding the use of rFVIIa are
mainly related to the possibility of promoting thromboembolic complications. This was not observed in the
2005 randomized controlled trial, but has been reported in retrospective reviews.73 Currently, in combat
settings, rFVIIa is judiciously used in patients with life-threatening bleeding requiring massive transfusion.
Damage Control Surgery
During the past 20 years, a new approach to trauma surgery known as damage control surgery (DCS) has
been developed. Damage control surgery has been practiced in both civilian and combat settings, and is
currently implemented in OEF and OIF. Traditional teaching advocates aiming for a single, definitive
operation to repair traumatic injuries. Such an approach stems from the concern that an incomplete
operation, or the need for multiple operations, could threaten a patient’s overall stability and recovery.
However, some definitive repairs of complex injury patterns may take hours to complete. In casualties
who arrive in hemorrhagic shock, the lethal triad of coagulopathy, acidosis, and hypothermia may not be
completely reversed before and during operative repair of injury. In these patients, metabolic derangements
may continue to worsen in the OR, even after control of hemorrhage is achieved. Such patients may have
a poorer outcome if subjected to a long, complex operation before physiologic parameters are restored.74,75
The principle of DCS is to minimize initial operative time in critically injured casualties by focusing only
on the immediately critical actions. These critical actions are: (1) control of hemorrhage; (2) prevention
of contamination and gastrointestinal soilage; and (3) protection from further injury. Injuries to the bowel
requiring primary anastomosis, or other time-consuming repairs, are left for the subsequent operation(s)
(Figs. 28, 29, and 30). Packing is often left in the abdomen. The abdomen is left open and sealed at the
skin with a vacuum-assisted dressing to prevent abdominal compartment syndrome. Orthopedic injuries
are treated with splinting or external fixation, and vascular injuries may be temporized with temporary
intralumenal vascular shunts.74,75,76
Modern Warfare | 27
42. Figure 28. (Top Left) This was a gunshot wound to the right back
creating a large defect in the psoas muscle, laceration of the inferior vena
cava (IVC) and destruction of the ascending colon and proximal transverse
colon. The patient underwent control and repair of the IVC, packing of
the retroperitoneal psoas defect (white pads seen in photo), and stapled
resection of the right colon with blind ends left. Distal end of resected colon
is seen under suction catheter tip. The proximal resected end was the distal
ileum, which is being held in the foreground.
Figure 29. (Top Right) Repaired inferior vena cava.
Figure 30. (Bottom Right) Completed temporary vacuum-assisted
dressing abdominal closure. The bowel and abdominal cavity were
irrigated and decontaminated before temporary abdominal closure. The
casualty underwent damage control resuscitation – receiving PRBCs,
FWB, and rFVIIa – and was transported to a Level III facility less than
three hours after his arrival.
In damage control surgery, an abbreviated operation is performed to control hemorrhage and contain
gastrointestinal soilage. After a period of postoperative resuscitation in the ICU, patients may return to
the operating room for a definitive procedure.
Following an abbreviated operation, patients are taken to the ICU to reverse the lethal triad through
resuscitation and restoration of physiologic parameters. Here, crystalloids and transfusion are continued as
needed to restore tissue perfusion and correct acidosis, and the patient is warmed and treated with vasoactive
agents if needed. While the aim is to return to the OR in 24 to 48 hours, the definitive operation should
not take place until the metabolic derangements are largely reversed. Several complications, including
hemodynamic instability, organ failure, or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) may delay the
timing of the second operation. In the definitive operation, abdominal packing and clots are removed and
the abdomen is reexplored and washed out. Additional debridement, repair of shunted vascular injuries,
anastomosis of bowel, and abdominal closure are performed at this subsequent operation.74,75
The timing of definitive surgical repair and abdominal wall closure will often vary based on injury type,
severity, status (military or civilian), and nationality of the patient. For example, many US service members
will undergo definitive abdominal wall closure following AIREVAC to rearward Level IV or V facilities,
28 | Modern Warfare
43. while host nation patients typically receive definitive surgical care at the Combat Support Hospital.77 The
combat trauma experience of the US Army 102nd FST in Afghanistan consisted of performing 112 surgeries
on 90 patients over a seven-month period. Trauma accounted for 78 percent of surgical cases. Sixty-seven
percent of these surgeries were performed on Afghan militia and civilians, 30 percent on US soldiers, and
3 percent on other coalition forces. Mechanisms of injury included gunshot wounds (34 percent), blasts (18
percent), motor vehicle crashes (14 percent), stab wounds (5 percent), and other trauma (7 percent).77
The three-step process of abbreviated operative repair, ICU resuscitation, and definitive operative repair
of DCS follows the fundamental principle of treating the most immediate life-threats first. While DCR and
DCS include several departures from classic ATLS teaching, the basic philosophy of prioritizing injury is
the same.74,75
Summary
The greatest honor we can pay to war casualties is to use their sacrifice to improve and optimize medical
care. The lessons learned from OEF and OIF and prior conflicts have led to numerous advances in combat
casualty and civilian trauma care. The CCC environment is vastly different from civilian trauma care
settings. Thus, the approach to a combat casualty must take into account many additional logistical factors
beyond the type and mechanism of injury. These include: what is the fastest way to reach a medical
facility?, who is available to assist upon arrival?, is the area free of hostile fire?, will adequate personnel,
blood products, and equipment be available for all those injured?, and, if not, how should casualties be
prioritized? Awareness of local and support CCC capacity is as critical to improving patient survival rates
as are initial airway, breathing, and circulation interventions.
The recognition of hemorrhage as the major cause of preventable death has led to a paradigm shift in the
approach to the bleeding patient. Hemorrhage must be immediately and aggressively addressed with direct
pressure, tourniquets, hemostatic agents, and rapid evacuation to a CCC facility. Resuscitation must be
geared toward preventing and treating the downward spiral of the lethal triad of acidosis, hypothermia, and
coagulopathy. Surgical intervention is directed towards rapid control of hemorrhage and contamination,
rather than definitive repair of injury. Combat casualty care continues to evolve. The JTTS and the
promotion of peer-reviewed scientific research during the current conflicts is a relatively new phenomenon
that fosters investigation and innovation. The many improvements developed from the lessons of prior wars
are now saving lives, and the efforts to continue learning will offer the best chance of survival and recovery
to those we care for in the future.
Case Study
The following is a copy of the Level II treatment summary from the record of a casualty from OIF that
demonstrates most of the aspects of the prior discussions. It details the treatment from appropriate rapid
initial care according to the TCCC guidelines, to utilization of DCR and DCS procedures on a critically
injured casualty. The treatment summary illustrates how the continuum of care across the different levels of
care leads to the survival of a casualty who in prior conflicts undoubtedly would have died.
Modern Warfare | 29
44. Casualty # 0822
26-year-old male presented in class IV hemorrhagic shock about 25 minutes after wounding from a sniper
round to abdomen. Treatment in field consisted of abdominal dressing over wound and single intravenous
catheter access with limited fluid resuscitation. Initial evaluation in Shock Trauma Platoon (STP) revealed
entrance wound to right flank with exit out anterior abdominal wall just to right of umbilicus with eviscerated
omentum. Initial vital signs: blood pressure (BP) of 80/40, heart rate (HR) of 148, respiratory rate (RR) of
26, and pulse oximeter oxygen saturation (SpO2) of 98 percent. Additional intravenous access was obtained,
blood sent for labs, and antibiotics started and patient taken immediately to the operating room (less than
five minutes). Walking blood bank (WBB) activated.
Operative Findings:
• 2,000 milliliters hemoperitoneum with gross fecal contamination
• Large central zone I and right zone II retroperitoneal hematoma with active bleeding
• Abdominal cavity packed and aortic control at hiatus obtained (aortic cross clamp time of 55 minutes)
• Right medial visceral rotation performed
• Grade 5 (pulverized) right colon injury noted
• Multiple lacerations to inferior vena cava from confluence to just inferior to the right renal vein; the
aorta is negative for injury
• Grade 3 laceration to third portion duodenum with ischemia
Initial Labs:
pH = 7.1 Base Deficit = -16 Hematocrit = 28 percent
Procedures:
• Initial attempt at inferior vena cava venorraphy but multiple lacerations posteriorly (probable torn
lumbars) quickly led to oversew and ligation
• Simple whipstitch closure of duodenum to stop contamination and bleeding
• Stapled resection right colon with blind ends
• Packing right retroperitoneal psoas wound
• Washout peritoneum with rewarming
• Vacuum-pack closure abdominal dressing
• Bilateral lower extremity four compartment fasciotomies (for ligated inferior vena cava and one-hour
ischemia time)
Resuscitation by Anesthesia:
• Three liters normal saline
• Six units PRBCs
• 24 units FWB
• 7.2 milligrams rFVIIa
Packaged for En-Route-Care:
• VS: BP = 115/61 mm Hg HR=147 RR=12 (ventilated) SpO2=100 percent
• Departed to Level III facility less than four hours after arrival at STP
• En-route-care interventions: blood administration, sedation and paralytics, ventilator management;
departing end-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2) = 52 mm Hg
30 | Modern Warfare
45. Notes from Joint Patient Tracking Application (JPTA) at Level III Facility:
Findings from original STP facility: Gunshot wound to right flank exited near navel. On exploratory
laparotomy, patient had a long tear from the confluence of the inferior vena cava to just below the right renal
vein. Inferior vena cava oversewn and ligated proximally and distally. Grade 3 injury to the third portion of
the duodenum was oversewn. The aorta was cross-clamped at the hiatus (total aortic cross-clamp time was
55 minutes). Right colon with grade 5 injury: colon was resected distal ileum to mid-transverse with blind
ends. Gross fecal contamination in peritoneum. Two laparotomy pads packed in right retroperitoneum.
One Kerlex™ packing along anterior abdominal wall to exit wound. Vacuum-pack closure of abdomen,
bilateral four compartment fasciotomies of lower extremities for ligated inferior vena cava and approximate
one hour of ischemia time. Patient received six units of PRBCs, 24 units of FWB, 7.2 milligrams of rFVIIa.
Vital Signs Upon Arrival:
BP = 153/74 mm Hg HR=108 RR=15 SpO2=100 percent
Level III Facility Admit Note:
Patient was noted to be hemodynamically stable, sedated, and on the ventilator. His abdomen was dressed
open and with a negative-pressure dressing (supplied by Jackson Pratts). The right lateral abdomen wound
was noted. No other injuries were noted. The coagulation studies were normal and his hematocrit was
normal. His base excess was +1. He appeared well-resuscitated. Given the large amount of blood loss at the
original operation, will allow further time for hemostasis and he had just recently been taken from the OR.
If he remains stable, will reexplore early this a.m.
Next Day Note:
Procedure Note: (1) Abdominal reexploration; (2) Segmental resection of proximal third portion of
duodenum; (3) Side-to-side duodenoduodenostomy; (4) Pyloric exclusion; (5) Roux-en-Y gastrojejeunostomy;
(6) Retrograde duodenostomy tube; (7) Jejeunostomy feeding tube; and (8) Stamm gastrostomy.
Postoperative Day Three Note:
Patient stable and now off ventilator. Tolerating tube feeds. Fasciotomies closed today. Jackson Pratt (JP)
with minimal drainage. Labs normal. Ready for transfer in a.m.
Modern Warfare | 31